:''Linux divides its physical RAM (random access memory) into chucks of memory called pages. Swapping is the process whereby a page of memory is copied to the preconfigured space on the hard disk, called swap space, to free up that page of memory. The combined sizes of the physical memory and the swap space is the amount of virtual memory available.''

:''Linux divides its physical RAM (random access memory) into chucks of memory called pages. Swapping is the process whereby a page of memory is copied to the preconfigured space on the hard disk, called swap space, to free up that page of memory. The combined sizes of the physical memory and the swap space is the amount of virtual memory available.''

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== Swap space ==

Swap space will usually be a disk partition but can also be a file. Users may create a swap space during installation of Arch Linux or at any later time should it become necessary. Swap space is generally recommended for users with less than 1 GB of RAM, but becomes more a matter of personal preference on systems with gratuitous amounts of physical RAM (though it is required for suspend-to-disk support).

Swap space will usually be a disk partition but can also be a file. Users may create a swap space during installation of Arch Linux or at any later time should it become necessary. Swap space is generally recommended for users with less than 1 GB of RAM, but becomes more a matter of personal preference on systems with gratuitous amounts of physical RAM (though it is required for suspend-to-disk support).

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To check swap status, use:

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$ swapon -s

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Or:

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$ free -m

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{{Note|There is no performance advantage to either a contiguous swap file or a partition, both are treated the same way.}}

== Swap partition ==

== Swap partition ==

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Line 42:

To enable this swap partition on boot, add an entry to [[fstab]]:

To enable this swap partition on boot, add an entry to [[fstab]]:

/dev/sda2 none swap defaults 0 0

/dev/sda2 none swap defaults 0 0

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{{Note|If using a TRIM supported SSD, discard is a valid mount option for swap. If creating swap manually, using -d or --discard achieves the same. For more information and other available mount options, see the swapon man page.}}

== Swap file ==

== Swap file ==

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As an alternative to creating an entire partition, a swap file offers the ability to vary its size on-the-fly, and is more easily removed altogether. This may be especially desirable if disk space is at a premium (e.g. a modestly-sized SSD).

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As an alternative to creating an entire partition, a swap file offers the ability to vary its size on-the-fly, and is more easily removed altogether. This may be especially desirable if disk space is at a premium (e.g. a modestly-sized SSD).

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{{Note|The BTRFS filesystem does not currently support swapfiles. Failure to heed this warning may result in filesystem corruption. Though it should be noted that one may use a swap file on btrfs if mounted through a loop device. This method will result in severely degraded swap performance.}}

=== Swap file creation ===

=== Swap file creation ===

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Line 56:

# fallocate -l 512M /swapfile

# fallocate -l 512M /swapfile

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Or

# dd if=/dev/zero of=/swapfile bs=1M count=512

# dd if=/dev/zero of=/swapfile bs=1M count=512

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Line 85:

Remove swapfile:

Remove swapfile:

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# rm -rf /swapfile

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# rm -f /swapfile

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=== Swap file resuming ===

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Resuming the system from a swap file after hibernation requires an addition parameter to the kernel compared to resuming from a swap partition. The additional parameter is {{ic|1=resume_offset=<Swap File Offset>}}.

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The value of {{ic|<Swap FIle Offset>}} can be obtained from the output of filefrag {{ic|-v}}; The output is in a table format; the required value is located in the {{ic|physical}} column from the first row. Eg:

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# filefrag -v /swapfile

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Filesystem type is: ef53

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File size of /swapfile is 4290772992 (1047552 blocks, blocksize 4096)

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ext logical physical expected length flags

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0 0 7546880 6144

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1 6144 7557120 7553023 2048

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2 8192 7567360 7559167 2048

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...

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From the example {{ic|<Swap FIle Offset>}} is {{ic|7546880}}.

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{{Note|Please note that in kernel {{ic|resume}} parameter you still have to type path to partition (e.g. {{ic|1=resume=/dev/sda1}}) not to swapfile explicitly! Parameter {{ic|resume_offset}} is for informing system where swapfile starts on hard disk.}}

Thanks to modularity offered by Linux, we can have multiple swap partitions spread over different devices. To add a a USB device to SWAP:

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Thanks to modularity offered by Linux, we can have multiple swap partitions spread over different devices. If you have a very full hard disk, USB device can be used as partition temporally. But this method has some severe disadvantage：

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* USB device is slower than hard disk.

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* flash memories have limited write cycles. Using it as swap partition will kill it quickly.

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* when another device is attached to the computer, no swap can be used.

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First, take a USB flash and partition it with a swap partition. To do this you can use graphical tools such as Gparted or console tools like fdisk. Make sure to label the partition as SWAP before writing the partition table.

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To add a a USB device to SWAP, first take a USB flash and partition it with a swap partition.You can use graphical tools such as Gparted or console tools like fdisk. Make sure to label the partition as SWAP before writing the partition table.

{{Box RED||Make sure you are writing the partition to the correct disk!}}

{{Box RED||Make sure you are writing the partition to the correct disk!}}

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Next edit the {{Ic|fstab}}

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Next open {{ic|/etc/fstab}}.

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# nano /etc/fstab

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Now add a new entry, just under the current swap entry, which take the current swap partition over the new USB one

Now add a new entry, just under the current swap entry, which take the current swap partition over the new USB one

Line 106:

Line 107:

ls -l /dev/disk/by-uuid/ | grep /dev/sdc1

ls -l /dev/disk/by-uuid/ | grep /dev/sdc1

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Just replace sdc1 with your new USB swap partition. {{Ic|sdb1}}

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Just replace sdc1 with your new USB swap partition. {{ic|sdb1}}

{{Box GREEN||We use UUID because when you attach other devices to the computer it could modify the device order}}

{{Box GREEN||We use UUID because when you attach other devices to the computer it could modify the device order}}

Line 115:

Line 116:

in the ''original'' swap entry for teaching fstab to use HD swap only when USB is full

in the ''original'' swap entry for teaching fstab to use HD swap only when USB is full

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ADVANTAGES

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* access time is lower than traditional HD

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* avoid power on HD when is in stand-by

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* USB pendrives are cheaper than HD (meaning: you can't get a $5 HDD, price per gigabyte is obviously much higher for flash drives)

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DISADVANTAGES

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* flash memories have limited write cycles

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* another device attached to the computer

This guide will work for other memory such as SD cards, etc.

This guide will work for other memory such as SD cards, etc.

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== Swap test ==

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Ensure that swap is activated with {{Ic|swapon}} of {{Ic|free}}:

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$ swapon -s

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$ free -m

== Performance Tuning ==

== Performance Tuning ==

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The ''swappiness'' [[sysctl]] parameter represents the kernel's preference (or avoidance) of swap space. Swappiness can have a value between 0 and 100. Setting this parameter to a low value will reduce swapping from RAM, and is known to improve responsiveness on many systems.

The ''swappiness'' [[sysctl]] parameter represents the kernel's preference (or avoidance) of swap space. Swappiness can have a value between 0 and 100. Setting this parameter to a low value will reduce swapping from RAM, and is known to improve responsiveness on many systems.

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{{hc|/etc/sysctl.conf

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{{hc|/etc/sysctl.d/99-sysctl.conf|2=

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|2=<nowiki>

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vm.swappiness=1

vm.swappiness=1

vm.vfs_cache_pressure=50

vm.vfs_cache_pressure=50

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</nowiki>}}

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}}

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To test and more on why this may work, take a look at this [http://rudd-o.com/en/linux-and-free-software/tales-from-responsivenessland-why-linux-feels-slow-and-how-to-fix-that article].

Linux divides its physical RAM (random access memory) into chucks of memory called pages. Swapping is the process whereby a page of memory is copied to the preconfigured space on the hard disk, called swap space, to free up that page of memory. The combined sizes of the physical memory and the swap space is the amount of virtual memory available.

Contents

Swap space

Swap space will usually be a disk partition but can also be a file. Users may create a swap space during installation of Arch Linux or at any later time should it become necessary. Swap space is generally recommended for users with less than 1 GB of RAM, but becomes more a matter of personal preference on systems with gratuitous amounts of physical RAM (though it is required for suspend-to-disk support).

To check swap status, use:

$ swapon -s

Or:

$ free -m

Note: There is no performance advantage to either a contiguous swap file or a partition, both are treated the same way.

Swap partition

A swap partition can be created with most GNU/Linux partitioning tools (e.g. fdisk, cfdisk). Swap partitions are designated as type 82.

Note: If using a TRIM supported SSD, discard is a valid mount option for swap. If creating swap manually, using -d or --discard achieves the same. For more information and other available mount options, see the swapon man page.

Swap file

As an alternative to creating an entire partition, a swap file offers the ability to vary its size on-the-fly, and is more easily removed altogether. This may be especially desirable if disk space is at a premium (e.g. a modestly-sized SSD).

Note: The BTRFS filesystem does not currently support swapfiles. Failure to heed this warning may result in filesystem corruption. Though it should be noted that one may use a swap file on btrfs if mounted through a loop device. This method will result in severely degraded swap performance.

Swap file creation

As root use fallocate to create a swap file the size of your choosing (M = Megabytes, G = Gigabytes) (dd can also be used but will take longer). For example, creating a 512 MB swap file:

Set the right permissions (a world-readable swap file is a huge local vulnerability)

# chmod 600 /swapfile

After creating the correctly-sized file, format it to swap:

# mkswap /swapfile

Activate the swapfile:

# swapon /swapfile

Edit /etc/fstab and add an entry for the swap file:

/swapfile none swap defaults 0 0

Remove swap file

To remove a swap file, the current swap file must be turned off.

As root:

# swapoff -a

Remove swapfile:

# rm -f /swapfile

Swap with USB device

Thanks to modularity offered by Linux, we can have multiple swap partitions spread over different devices. If you have a very full hard disk, USB device can be used as partition temporally. But this method has some severe disadvantage：

USB device is slower than hard disk.

flash memories have limited write cycles. Using it as swap partition will kill it quickly.

when another device is attached to the computer, no swap can be used.

To add a a USB device to SWAP, first take a USB flash and partition it with a swap partition.You can use graphical tools such as Gparted or console tools like fdisk. Make sure to label the partition as SWAP before writing the partition table.

Make sure you are writing the partition to the correct disk!

Next open /etc/fstab.

Now add a new entry, just under the current swap entry, which take the current swap partition over the new USB one

UUID=... none swap defaults,pri=10 0 0

where UUID is taken from the output of the command

ls -l /dev/disk/by-uuid/ | grep /dev/sdc1

Just replace sdc1 with your new USB swap partition. sdb1

We use UUID because when you attach other devices to the computer it could modify the device order

Last, add

pri=0

in the original swap entry for teaching fstab to use HD swap only when USB is full

This guide will work for other memory such as SD cards, etc.

Performance Tuning

Swap values can be adjusted to help performance.

Swappiness

The swappinesssysctl parameter represents the kernel's preference (or avoidance) of swap space. Swappiness can have a value between 0 and 100. Setting this parameter to a low value will reduce swapping from RAM, and is known to improve responsiveness on many systems.

Priority

If you have more than one swap file or swap partition you should consider assigning a priority value (0 to 32767) for each swap area. The system will use swap areas of higher priority before using swap areas of lower priority. For example, if you have a faster disk (/dev/sda) and a slower disk (/dev/sdb), assign a higher priority to the swap area located on the faster device. Priorities can be assigned in fstab via the pri parameter: